Evolution of Quality in Xerox
Evolution of Quality in Xerox
Evolution of Quality in Xerox
QUALITY IN XEROX
Presented by,
Group 1
Jappreet S. Bhatia
Lokesh Yadav
Deepak Jain
XEROX
color
and
black-and-white
printers,
1959
1972 1979
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XEROX HISTORY
Continuous
Improvement
1980
1983
1989
1990s
AWARDS
The Deming Award (Japan) In 1980
The Malcolm Baldridge National Quality Award In 1989
The European Quality Award In 1992
ISSUES IN CASE
During the 1970s, however, IBM and Kodak entered the
high-volume copier businessXeroxs principal market.
Several Japanese companies introduced high-quality lowvolume copiers, a market that Xerox had virtually
ignored, and established a foundation for moving into the
high- volume market
Xerox was soon losing market share to Japanese
competitors, and by the early 1980s it faced a serious
competitive threat from copy machine manufacturers in
Japan; Xeroxs market share had fallen to less than 50
percent
CONTD
In comparing itself with its competition, Xerox
discovered that it had nine times as many suppliers, twice
as many employees, cycle times
That were twice as long, 10 times as many rejects, and
seven times as many manufacturing defects in finished
products. It was clear that radical changes were required
LEADERSHIP THROUGH
QUALITY PROGRAM AT XEROX
In 1983, company president David T. Kearns became
convinced that Xerox needed a long-range, comprehensive
quality strategy as well as a change in its traditional
management culture .
The strategy for cultural change in Xerox that enables and
empowers people with quality tools and processes to,
1. Meet customer requirements
2. Achieve business priorities
3. Continuously improve
OBJECTIVES ACHIEVED
To instill quality as the basic business principle in Xerox,
and to ensure that quality improvement becomes the job
of every Xerox person.
To ensure that Xerox people, individually and
collectively, provide our external and internal customers
with innovative products and services that fully satisfies
their existing and latent requirements.
To establish, as a way of life, management and work
processes that enable all Xerox people to continuously
pursue quality improvement in meeting customer
requirements
BENCHMARKING
Benchmarked more than 200 processes with
those of non competitive companies
Ideas for improving production scheduling
Cummins engine company
Improving
distribution
system
L.L.Bean
(Logistics co.)
Improving billing processes American Express
More than 40,000 surveys were mailed in one
month to understand the customer satisfaction
level, and resolved the dissatisfaction within no
XEROX S BENCHMARKING
MODEL
Planning
Analysis
Integration
Action
Maturity
IMPORTANT SUPPORTING
ELEMENTS
Recognition
and
Reward
Tools
and
Processes
Transition
Team
Xerox is a
Total Quality
Company
Training
Communication
Senior
Management
Behavior
RESULTS OF LEADERSHIP
THROUGH QUALITY
o Rejection rate fell from 10,000 ppm to 300 ppm
o No inspection was required for the supplied parts
o Number of suppliers were cut down drastically
o Cost of purchase was reduced to 45 percent
o Production time reduced by 60 percent
o Quality improved by 93 percent
o Customer satisfaction and employee satisfaction resulted in
increased market share and more profits
Xeroxs Outcome
Initially:
Failed to focus adequately on core work processes
and statistics.
Plan was not integrated with business processes.
Not tuned to the company culture and the need to
change it.
Did not pick the right quality czar at the start.
Did not push the operating units hard enough.
RESTRENGTHENING
QUALITY
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS SUPPORT
Xerox had over 375 major information systems
Performance excellence
process
LEARNING'S
Customer focused employees
Quality
Participation, speed, teamwork based on trust and learning
Process is objective aligned to the companys direction
Benchmarking, both internal and external
DMAIC- desire, measure, analyze, improve and control
Lean Six Sigma
QUALITY IS A RACE
WITHOUT A FINISH LINE AT
XEROX
Quality is a never ending process
New technology
Skill full employees and management
Lean six sigma just a part
AT MOTOROLA
Flexible Manufacturing
1981 launched a project to improve the quality
Learnt it from Dominos Pizza
2002 won The Baldrige Award
QSR
Competitive Benchmarking
THANK YOU